Post one favorite photo you took (max 1 per day) with some details.

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Sunset at the Fisherman's Memorial, Woodley Island, Eureka, California
This is awesome Axel and would go well in the thread:
Pictures of anything purple
Also

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This photo of Mad River Beach near McKinleyville, California was taken August 30th, 1998, the day after I met the love of my life. This was our "first date", if you could call it that. We went into McKinleyville and had pizza, took some back to the campground for the rugrats, and went for a sunset walk on Clam Beach. (Where we were both camped.) We ended up walking all the way to the mouth of the Mad River. This photo does not do justice to the sunset that evening. It was fantastic. This was one of the first digital photos I ever took. When we got back to where we were close to the campground, we sat on a downed Redwood and watched high tide come in and the beautiful sky artwork.


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Flagstaff sits at 7,200 feet with Alpine conditions, in summer during the Monsoons, it rains every day between 2:00p and 3:00p, and in winter they typically get 1 to 2.5 feet of snow several times a year. At least that is how it was in the mid-1990s when I lived there. If you can handle the weather, Flagstaff can be a great place to live.

Webcams - Flagstaff
 
Flagstaff sits at 7,200 feet with Alpine conditions, in summer during the Monsoons, it rains every day between 2:00p and 3:00p, and in winter they typically get 1 to 2.5 feet of snow several times a year. At least that is how it was in the mid-1990s when I lived there. If you can handle the weather, Flagstaff can be a great place to live.

Webcams - Flagstaff
It was a really NICE college town in the 60s-80s. Sadly, today, California $$$$$ has moved in and nothing is affordable. A bad hotel room is $300-400 a night on weekends/snow season. Northern Arizona University is very nice still, but college housing off campus is sky high these days. I loved Flag in the 70s and 80s.
 
Mr. George Washington..... Griffiths, arrived from Manchester, England, and set up an ironmongery and mechanical repair shop in Toowoomba, Queensland. This was the beginning of what is now the Southern Cross Organisation.
Toowoomba Foundry sold its first windmill under the trade name “Southern Cross” in 1903.

The Australian countryside is dotted with this iconic piece of working history. A drive into the outback will see many, many of these windmills. Some, a great many, in a sorry state of affairs. But don't be fooled. Southern Cross has been making these windmill for over 100 years and their usable life span is at least 50 years, and beyond.
When people are asked - What comes to mind when Australia is mentioned?
Sydney Opera House
Ayres Rock
Shrimps on the Barbi
Kangaroos
Kookaburras
Deadly Creatures....
The Southern Cross Windmill is my number 1 image of Australia.
 


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